In Breakfast with Braden he played American serviceman "Brandon Marlow". Other cast members acted as stooges, including Pearl Carr, Benny Lee and bandleader Nat Temple. Other BBC radio shows followed: Bedtime with Braden, which included his signature sign-out song "Lullaby of Birdland"; Between Time; Bathtime; and Bedlam with Braden. Ronald Fletcher, the announcer, was drawn into the script which added to the ingenuity and enjoyment. Braden also appeared in 1951 alongside his wife in An Evening at Home with Bernard Braden and Barbara Kelly.
Television
Braden is probably best remembered for On the Braden Beat, a popular consumer affairs programme made for ITV by Associated Television, which ran from 1962 to 1967. Jock Watson and, later, Francis Coleman produced this Saturday late-night show, which also examined current political issues affecting the British public. The show was interspersed with lighthearted sketches and music, and helped a number of actors to get a start on television. Performers frequently featured included Peter Cook, Jake Thackray and Tim Brooke-Taylor. A successor with essentially the same format, Braden's Week, appeared when he transferred to the BBC from 1967 to 1972. This show was cancelled when he advertised margarine on the BBC's commercial rival ITV; the BBC felt this was inconsistent with his role as the consumers' spokesman. Esther Rantzen, one of the researcher/presenters, went on to front a similar consumer-focused show, That's Life!. In 1974, Braden also hosted a short-lived Canadian edition of The Braden Beat for Canada's fledgling Global Television Network. Braden hosted a quiz show for London Weekend Television in 1976, The Sweepstakes Game. Two contestants decided which of six star guests were most likely to help them to win cash and prizes. He later presented episodes of the showAll Our Yesterdays. Braden independently produced and shot in 1967-68 an extended series of interviews of public figures, conducted by himself, for a series called Now and Then but the series was never completed or sold to a broadcaster. The series was re-edited in 2008 as Sex Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll: The 60s Revealed, in which the original interviewees saw their 1968 interviews for the first time.
Film and stage
His few film appearances included Love in Pawn, Jet Storm , The Full Treatment, The Day the Earth Caught Fire , and the 1962 films Two and Two Make Six and All Night Long. In the same year he played Flight Surgeon Randall in the British filmThe War Lover, alongside Steve McQueen, Robert Wagner and a young Michael Crawford. He also narrated the 20-minute British Transport Films short The Coasts of Clyde, in which he announces himself as a Canadian traveller arriving in Scotland in pursuit of an ancestor in the land of his parents. On the stage he appeared in two Tennessee Williams plays, as Mitch in the London production of A Streetcar Named Desire, and later as the lead in Period of Adjustment.
Book
Braden published an autobiography, The Kindness of Strangers; the title is an allusion to A Streetcar Named Desire.